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To be Wise be Willing to Look Foolish — Chuck B Philosophy

Charles Black M.D.
2 min readDec 14, 2020

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If you go to a rock concert and the band plays all the songs on their album, just like they sound on the album, you think it was a great concert. But things are not so easy for a comedian or a philosopher.

I once heard a comedian lament that it’s much harder to do comedy than music. The audience expects fresh material and new jokes at every humorous show. Unlike the rock concert where people buy tickets to hear their favorite songs, the comedian’s fans feel cheated if the comic retells jokes.

Being a philosopher has its challenges. When the philosopher says something profound, it immediately rings true to the listener. The audience thinks. “Oh, ya. That makes sense.”So the listeners then assume they knew it all along or could have figured it out on their own. The audience then accuses the philosopher of being a fool for telling them something so obvious.

The philosopher’s job is to point out to people things people should already know, or wisdom the audience could arrive at on their own if they thought about it. But the listeners likely would not have thought about it on their own if the philosopher had not pointed the idea out to them in the first place.

To be wise is to be willing to appear to be foolish. As the Greek slave turned philosopher, Epictetus, warned, “If…

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Charles Black M.D.
Charles Black M.D.

Written by Charles Black M.D.

Dr. Charles Black is a general surgeon, author, photographer, outdoorsman, world traveler and fireside philosopher. Website:https://chuckbphilosophy.com

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